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MUHC Glen Campus : Building PR from Moshe Safdie and Associates 1 Dec
2006
Moshe Safdie returns to the city of his alma mater to draw the master
plan for the
McGill University Health Centre's Glen Campus
Montreal, November 21, 2006-Dr. Arthur T. Porter, Director General and
CEO of the McGill University Health Centre (MUHC), announced today that
Moshe Safdie, a McGill University graduate and world-renowned architect,
has accepted to design the master plan for the Glen Campus of the MUHC,
a 43-acre former brownfield site destined to revitalize several neighbourhoods.
Mr. Safdie will join a consortium of elite Quebec and U.S. architects
in working on the $1.579-billion redevelopment project. The MUHC will
be his first academic healthcare centre.
Three years after graduating from McGill, 24-year-old Moshe Safdie shone
a spotlight on Montreal that was seen around the world when he took charge
of the master plan for Expo '67 and created what is undeniably a 20th
century icon with Habitat '67. Since that initial project, the now veteran
architect's work has spanned the globe and includes a rich array of public
and academic institutions as well as major cultural and civic projects.
His return home to Montreal represents a wonderful opportunity to celebrate
and assure the city's appointment as a UNESCO City of Design.
"After only one conversation with Moshe Safdie, I realized this is
a man who respects the people who will ultimately use the buildings he
creates," stated Dr. Arthur T. Porter. "It's not about grandiose
architecture or what's fashionable today. Mr. Safdie's soft-spoken manner
and philosophy convinced me that the healing environment which will be
created on the MUHC's Glen Campus will indeed shape the face of health
care in the 21st century."
There are myriad challenges in designing a world-class academic healthcare
campus, which is dedicated to integrated clinical care for children and
adults as well as research and teaching. From a functional and technical
design perspective, these challenges include creating distinct yet connected
environments, ensuring user-friendliness for patients, families, visitors
and personnel, and planning buildings that can evolve apace of ever-advancing
medical practice and science. Success also hinges on how well the campus
fits into its surroundings and how people interact with the space.
"Hospital environments have come to be synonymous with alienation,
as they have grown larger, more confusing and an assemblage of patched-up
additions. I am most excited about the challenge and opportunity presented
by the MUHC to create a new model for healthcare architecture for the
21st century. I look forward to meeting the objectives articulated by
David Culver and Arthur Porter, notably of creating a place of community,
humanity and comfort for patients, their families and the dedicated healthcare
professionals. Rarely has there been an opportunity to re-examine hospital
architecture from first principles," noted Moshe Safdie.
The consortium charged with designing the two campuses for the MUHC comprises
Les architectes Lemay et associés; Jodoin Lamarre Pratte et associés
architectes; André Ibghy Architectes; and Menkès Shooner
Dagenais Letourneux. In addition to Moshe Safdie & Associates, Perkins+Will
will contribute invaluable international expertise to the team, which
has a combined total of more than one hundred years of experience in major
projects.
"We have an incredibly dynamic group," stated Louis T. Lemay,
Senior Architect and President, Les architectes Lemay et associés.
"The energy that will drive this project is sure to guarantee world-class
facilities that are on the vanguard of the best in healthcare design trends.
We're all looking forward to the creative process."
Safdie's Canadian projects include Montreal's Habitat '67 and Montreal
Museum of Fine Arts (last pavilion); Quebec City's Musée de la
civilisation; Ottawa's National Gallery of Canada; Toronto's Pearson International
Airport (rebuild); and Vancouver's largest ever capital project, Library
Square. His peers and the international community have recognized his
extensive repertoire of projects. Recent building openings include the
Telfair Museum of Art in Savannah and the Yad Vashem Museum in Jerusalem.
The Khalsa Memorial Complex, the national museum of the Sikh people in
Punjab, India, is currently under construction. He has recently been commissioned
to design a $3.4-billion integrated resort for the Venetian Sands in Singapore,
to be complete in 2009.
The MUHC has registered the Redevelopment Project with the Canada Green
Building Council and is seeking LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental
Design) certification-a benchmark for the design, construction, and operation
of high performance green buildings-for both the Glen and Mountain campuses.
About the MUHC Redevelopment Project
Guided by its mission and its role as the nerve centre of the McGill integrated
university hospital network, the MUHC is carrying out a $1.579-billion
Redevelopment Project that will help the Government achieve its vision
for academic medicine in Quebec. Excellence in patient care, research,
education and technology assessment will be fostered on two state-of-art
campuses-The Mountain and the Glen-and through strong relationships with
healthcare partners. Each LEED®-registered campus will be designed
to provide patients and their families with "The Best Care For Life"
in a healing environment that is anchored in best sustainable development
practices, including BOMA Go Green guidelines.
About the MUHC
The MUHC is a comprehensive academic health institution with an international
reputation for excellence in clinical programmes, research, teaching and
technology evaluation. The MUHC is a merger of five teaching hospitals
affiliated with the Faculty of Medicine at McGill University: the Montreal
Children's, Montreal General, Royal Victoria, and Montreal Neurological
hospitals, and the Montreal Chest Institute. Building on the tradition
of medical leadership of the founding hospitals, the goal of the MUHC
is to provide patient care based on the most advanced knowledge in the
healthcare field and to contribute to the development of new knowledge.
McGill University Health Centre Glen Campus PR from Moshe Safdie and
Associates 1 Dec 2006
Buildings in Canada
Montreal Architecture
McGill University
Health Centre architect : Moshe Safdie
New York
Architects
Canadian Architects
World Architecture : e-architect
- a guide to key buildings across the globe
Buildings / photos for the McGill University, Montreal Architecture
page welcome: info@e-architect.co.uk
McGill University Health Centre
- page : adrian welch / isabelle lomholt
MUHC - Website: www.muhc.ca
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